Anisotropic thermodynamic and transport properties of single crystalline CaKFe4As4
Abstract
Single crystalline, single phase CaKFe4As4 has been grown out of a high temperature, quaternary melt. Temperature dependent measurements of x-ray diffraction, anisotropic electrical resistivity, elastoresistivity, thermoelectric power, Hall effect, magnetization and specific heat, combined with field dependent measurements of electrical resistivity and field and pressure dependent measurements of magnetization indicate that CaKFe4As4 is an ordered, stoichiometric, Fe-based superconductor with a superconducting critical temperature, Tc = 35.0 0.2 K. Other than superconductivity, there is no indication of any other phase transition for 1.8 K ≤ T ≤ 300 K. All of these thermodynamic and transport data reveal striking similarities to that found for optimally- or slightly over-doped (Ba1-xKx)Fe2As2, suggesting that stoichiometric CaKFe4As4 is intrinsically close to what is referred to as "optimal-doped" on a generalized, Fe-based superconductor, phase diagram. The anisotropic superconducting upper critical field, Hc2(T), of CaKFe4As4 was determined up to 630 kOe. The anisotropy parameter γ(T)=Hc2/Hc2\|, for H applied perpendicular and parallel to the c-axis, decreases from 2.5 at Tc to 1.5 at 25 K which can be explained by interplay of paramagnetic pairbreaking and orbital effects. The slopes of dHc2\|/dT-44 kOe/K and dHc2/dT -109 kOe/K at Tc yield an electron mass anisotropy of m/m\| 1/6 and short Ginzburg-Landau coherence lengths \|(0) 5.8 and (0) 14.3 . The value of Hc2(0) can be extrapolated to 920 kOe, well above the BCS paramagnetic limit.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.